Abstract

In this article, we investigate the need for a relevant transformative teacher education when current and future societal challenges have been decisive in defining a Norwegian education reform where interdisciplinarity in specific topics is judged crucial to current and future generations in the new National Curriculum. At the same time, Norwegian teacher education is criticized for not teaching relevant content and, hence, contributing to schools’ challenges to teach for future needs. This study is part of a larger research project engaging with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and OECD’s call for 21st Century Skills. The data material analyzed for this article is two-fold: (1) Regulatory documents for schools and teacher education account for the mandate given both educational levels, particularly examining similarities and differences in addressing interdisciplinary themes, methods, and assessments; (2) Questionnaire responses from 906 teachers, 155 student teachers, and 121 teacher educators respond to how they work with interdisciplinary education. The mandate assigned to the different levels of the education sector initially displays high ambitions for relevant education for a rapidly changing future. However, entering into the details, curricula seem contradictory at different educational levels, conservative, and with limited intentions of moving toward new and needed skills. Teachers are in general positive to interdisciplinary work, understand the significance to both society and individual, yet traditional activities of teaching prevail. Student teachers also judge interdisciplinary work as important but report little exposure during their teacher education. Teacher educators conduct interdisciplinary work mainly on their own but report a willingness to learn from colleagues. This study illustrates interest in, yet challenges with, interdisciplinary work across educational levels, and indicates a need for relevant transformative teacher education to be at the forefront, making educational content and methods responsive to the challenges future generations of teachers need.

Highlights

  • In this article, we investigate the need for transformative teacher education to meet current and future societal challenges

  • The mandate assigned to teacher education is not in sync with the new National Curriculum as it was in place some years in advance

  • The Ministry of Education and Research did not mention any need for interdisciplinary work in the Framework Plans for Teacher Education

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Summary

Introduction

We investigate the need for transformative teacher education to meet current and future societal challenges. Public Health and Life Skills, Democracy and Citizenship, and Sustainable Development are described in the Core curriculum as crucial to current and future generations and pivotal for education to engage with (The Directorate of Education and Training [UDIR], 2017). The XX research project has the overall hypothesis: Systematized, collaborative, and critical interdisciplinary work in teacher education, through the three interdisciplinary topics described above, will improve new teachers’ ability to address contemporary societal challenges, become agents of change, and empower pupils to become part of solutions needed to create sustainable and democratic societies. The project embraces the SDGs, what is of particular relevance to our focus in this article and the three interdisciplinary topics in the new National Curriculum, is Target 4.7: By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including, among others, through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and nonviolence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development (United Nations, 2015)

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